Terry v. Slidell Refrigerating & Heating, Inc.

271 So. 2d 536
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 26, 1972
DocketNo. 9089
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 271 So. 2d 536 (Terry v. Slidell Refrigerating & Heating, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Terry v. Slidell Refrigerating & Heating, Inc., 271 So. 2d 536 (La. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

TUCKER, Judge.

The plaintiff-appellant, Edward E. Terry, brought this suit to recover money allegedly due him by the named corporate defendants in the form of accrued bonuses. He filed a supplemental and amended petition in which he joined Carter A. Strick[538]*538land as a party defendant, and when Mr. Strickland died the plaintiff filed a second supplemental and amended petition in which he named Strickland’s heirs, who had accepted the deceased’s succession, as defendants. The plaintiff’s pleadings were filed in the alternative. The defendants interposed numerous exceptions and pleas, all of which were overruled by the trial court, and after the suit was heard on its merits, the trial judge rejected the plaintiff’s demands qnd dismissed his suit on the ground that at the outset a partnership had been created between Strickland and Terry, and, since this oral agreement between the parties envisioned Terry’s participation solely in the profits and not in the losses of the business, under the provisions of C.C. Art. 2814 the agreement was null and void, and Terry was not entitled to collect his share of the profits from the business on which agreement had been reached.

From the judgment of the trial court plaintiff has perfected this appeal, and has assigned five specifications of error of the lower court judgment, two of such with which we are principally concerned here, reading as follows:

1. “The trial court erred in not finding that the enterprise was the sole proprietorship of Carter A. Strickland which continued to exist after the incorporation of Slidell Refrigeration and Heating, Inc. and Slidell Metal Fabricators, Inc. and that the heirs of Carter A. Strickland were personally liable to Edward E. Terry for monies shown to be due him from, the business.
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5. “The court erred in not finding the heirs of Carter A. Strickland had accepted his succession unconditionally and were, therefore, personally indebted to Edward E. Terry because of the indebtedness of Carter A. Strickland to Edward E. Terry.”

t The facts of the case are somewhat involved., During the year 19S7 Terry went to work for the businesses owned by Carter A. Strickland, known as Slidell Refrigeration & Heating Co. and Slidell Metal Fabricators Co. The plaintiff was paid a starting salary of $40.00 per week which had increased to $175.00 weekly when Terry left the business on December 31, 1966. It is undisputed that orally it was agreed that Terry was to receive a bonus of five (5%) per cent of the net profits earned by the businesses during his first year of work, and that his bonus would increase 5% annually until it had reached 50% of the net profits. This graduated increase continued for about six years until it had reached 30%, but in the following year the bonus was enhanced to 50% of the net gains. The record reflects that Strickland was in complete accord with this method in arriving at the emoluments which were to be received by Terry from the businesses.

The record does not reflect that Terry ever acquired any ownership of the property or corpus of the businesses. He was Strickland’s employee, charged with the management of the concerns. Some emphasis is placed upon the fact that for the years 1960 and 1961 partnership returns were filed for income tax purposes, which supposedly denoted an intention at the outset to create a partnership between the parties. However, with the exception of those two years, at the insistence of Mr. Strickland the income tax returns were filed by the auditors on the basis of sole proprietorships. It is true that partnerships can be confected orally as well as in writing. It is also clear that the mere filing of a partnership income tax return does not in itself create a partnership.

According to the audits prepared by the public accounting firm of Neuberger & Coever the bonuses due Terry had accumulated and increased to the sum of $31,034.-53 over and above withdrawals from January 1, 1959 until January 1, 1965. On March 1, 1965 two corporations, as styled in the title of this suit, were formed. The corporate stock was allocated in the pro[539]*539portions of 25% each to Terry and Strickland’s three children. Mr. Strickland was not an incorporator nor a shareholder in either of the corporations. The bonus account of Terry was charged with the cost of his share of the stock in the sum of $2,000.00. The remaining bonus sum due Terry of $29,034.53, and the amount due Strickland of $30,068.50 over and above his withdrawals were transferred to the corporate books as debts of the corporations. By December 31, 1966 the bonus accounts (shares of the net profits) due Strickland and Terry were reflected on the corporate books to be the sums of $2,344.20 and $19,374.92 respectively over and above the withdrawals. In his original petition Terry acknowledged that his bonus account should be charged with certain monies and the value of certain equipment which he had received due the businesses in the total sum of $5,212.23. Terry alleged that this total credit left a balance due him of $14,950.19, but, according to his allegations, simple mathematics shows that the claimed balance due him is the sum of $14,162.69.

While it is true that the corporations were formed and created, these entities never operated or functioned. The businesses continued to operate and function in the same manner and under the same circumstances and control as had been the case before the confection of the corporate charters. Mr. Terry continued to manage the businesses with Mr. Strickland having the final say, control and supervision. There was never any formal transfer of the assets of the businesses to the corporations, and in like manner no acknowledgment of responsibility on the part of the corporations of any pre-existing in-debtednesses to be assumed by these entities. There was no resolution by the corporations authorizing the incurring of debt, and the boards of directors of these entities did not hold any meetings. It is clear from the record that the only thing done, other than the confection and filing of the corporate charters, indicative of even the existence of the corporations, were the books kept by the firm of Neuberger & Coever, Certified Public Accountants. Admittedly, the rights of third parties have not intervened nor come into play, and at first blush one would be inclined to reason that none of the parties to- this litigation could deny the existence and legal functioning of these corporations. However, we find throughout the record many instances where both sides to the litigation denied any effectiveness of the formation of the corporations as being dispositive of the dispute between Terry and Strickland. We agree with the trial judge’s analysis on this point insofai* as his holding that the corporations were merely established, and did not affect, alter or change the usual operation of the businesses.

The trial judge initially reasoned in effect that the whole tenor of the relationship between Terry and Strickland was in the nature of a partnership presumably because Terry was to participate in the net profits, and an arrangement, whereby Strickland would be obligated for Terry’s share of the profits, and Terry would not be obligated also for Strickland’s share of the profits, was not countenanced by law under C.C. Arts. ¿183 and 2184, which specifically deraign the right of a partner to receive profits without assuming losses.

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Bluebook (online)
271 So. 2d 536, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/terry-v-slidell-refrigerating-heating-inc-lactapp-1972.